If 3500 calories per pound of fat, and 970 calories per pound of hay, then Sandy needs an excess of 1350 pounds of hay in addition to the hay required to maintain her weight
I think. I'm terrible at math guys
If 3500 calories per pound of fat, and 970 calories per pound of hay, then Sandy needs an excess of 1350 pounds of hay in addition to the hay required to maintain her weight
I think. I'm terrible at math guys
Do bottom right and top right count? I mean, I'm pretty sure top right does, less sure about bottom right given the extent of procedures
I have large feet for my height (163cm, women's US 12) and tend to just wear men's shoes now. I have never had someone notice my feet are atypically sized, but it still feels like I'm wearing clown shoes if I wear Chucks or other canvas shoes.
You'll want to avoid pointed toes, and narrow styles, these are designed to elongate. Any kind of heel rise will shorten the length of your footprint, I personally prefer chunky heels to balance it out. I tend to wear moto style boots the most, just to throw a style name out there
There are actually more unisex styles in men's larger sizes out now than when I first started doing this (about 15 years ago). When I still wanted femme shoes I ended up buying from people who custom made drag queen shoes. It's still uncommon to find cute heels in my size in the wild.
Edit: I forgot to mention that all the style mags in the 00s (at least) were talking about elongating the leg-toe line, because psychologically it demonstrates dominance and power. (please remember the opening to The Devil Wears Prada for an example xD) So if/when you have the energy and desire for it, own it. None of the other women in your vincinity have that kind of power play ability!
Clues by Sam - Sep 7th 2025
02:00
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West Point trains army officers. They are a fraction of the veteran population
Veterans have been protesting this admin, but we are just as diverse a group as the rest of Americans
That's such a low price for silence
I have no idea if he used protective gear when applying it, which certainly could have increased his exposure. I would love to blame Monsanto, but most of the family carry the risk genes for this cancer too, and as yet his children are cancer free. Their babies though, not so much
A lot of the time you have to look at what isn't said.
Like: If they say "I have two innocent neighbors" and someone else said the person below them has two innocent neighbors, you can often see that there's an overlap in criminals.
Wyoming is next to a couple other states with significant Native American populations. The thing about vaccines is there's a lot of resistance in those populations, especially if it's white people administering them. Some of that crowd immunity we expect to have really needs to protect them too, and without it, they will be devastated by white people's policies again.
That's a very simplified statement without much cultural context, but I think it's so painful to blame the ~500k people in one large, mostly rural, largely uneducated state for this when much denser voting populations did too
In the 00s my uncle was in a position where Monsanto was suing him for not holding up his end of the contract, because he had a bad crop year. Anyway, my grandparents bailed him out by financing a lawyer who settled for him, and it really didn't fix the problem at all. He still lost his farm, my grandparents were no longer wealthy because they kept trying to help him, and the uncle died a couple years later to cancer (probably driven by stress). They bailed him out because they were afraid he'd kill himself over the farm, and it took him out anyway
Should have (gazpacho) tacked on so the ones on the far side of the tent understand it too
I always fail these stupid captchas/philosophy questions π